Sprouting Vines
Stapling Storm to a basic-land tutor is one of the stranger experiments in the keyword's brief, top-heavy life on the stack. The base spell is a Lay of the Land effect at a steep three mana, the kind of fixing nobody runs for the rate. The whole transaction only makes sense once you read the Storm reminder: cast this late in a chain of cantrips and rituals, and each copy fetches another basic, turning a single card into a fistful of lands pulled from the deck in one shot. The trouble is that the cards needed to make Storm count (the cheap spells that inflate the count) are rarely the cards that want a pile of basics in hand: a deck assembling a big storm count is usually trying to win that turn, not stock its land drops for the next five. That mismatch is the card's defining tension, and the reason it reads as a designer testing where Storm could be bolted on rather than where it belonged. It sits in Scourge's storm cycle as the green entry, the color least suited to the mechanic's combo math, and the effect chosen for it (deck thinning, hand-filling) is the one a storm turn cares about least.

